Claremont, NH
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member silverquill
N 43° 22.330 W 072° 20.230
18T E 715733 N 4805588
Housing both the City Hall and the Opera House, this landmark building was built in 1897 in the Italian Renaissance Revival style by Charles Rich and Hiram Beckwith who also designed the Newport, NH, Opera House.
Waymark Code: WM1Q70
Location: New Hampshire, United States
Date Posted: 06/22/2007
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member SowerMan
Views: 18

The Claremont City Hall Building is also home to the Claremont Opera House. Dedication of the building occurred on June 22, 1897. The cost was $62,000. The style of the building is Italian Renaissance Revival. The architect was Charles A. Rich. Rich was a native of Beverly, Massachusetts, and graduated from Dartmouth College. Hiram Beckwith, an architect in Claremont, was the contractor. Beckwith was also the designer of the neighboring Newport Town Hall and Opera House Building.

Many of the construction materials for the edifice came from the New England area. The foundation was built of Green Mountain Rock and the base was dressed Connecticut River Brownstone from Springfield, Massachusetts. On the major part of the exterior are nearly one million Lebanon bricks.

On the ground floor is an entrance lobby which originally led to an assembly hall which seated 700 and was used for town meetings and balls. In 1960 the first floor was remodeled, turning the former hall into offices and a City Council chamber.

Claremont takes its name from Claremont Castle, an English palace named in honor of John Holles, the first Earl of Clare. The castle was built under the direction of Thomas Pelham Holles, who was involved in relations between the American Colonies and England, and a cousin to Governor Benning Wentworth. Claremont's original land grant was a six-mile square area bordering the Connecticut River, including the governor's farm. The first Roman Catholic Church in New Hampshire was built in Claremont in 1823.

Claremont was first settled by Moses Spafford and David Lynde, two Connecticut grantees. The oldest areas are west of downtown Claremont whose early development was tied to the water power potential of the Sugar River and along which textile, paper and machinery mills were built, many of which remain today. The river--its total fall through the town is 250 feet--flows from Lake Sunapee emptying into the Connecticut at West Claremont. Although Claremont is best known for its industrial heritage, in the mid-1800s it enjoyed the reputation of being the best farming town in New Hampshire.”
Name: Claremont Town Hall

Address:
Opera House Square
Claremont, NH United States
03743


Date of Construction: 1897

Architect: Charles Rich and Hiram Beckwith

Web Site for City/Town/Municipality: [Web Link]

Memorials/Commemorations/Dedications: Not listed

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